7 crazy side effects from the shutdown

By Michael Pearson, CNN

Updated 2:07 PM ET, Thu October 10, 2013

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5 crazy shutdown side effects – A man sorts golden king crab in Auke Bay in Juneau, Alaska, in March 2007. The partial government shutdown has left crab fleets in limbo without any federal employees to set rules and quotas for the fishing season. A delay of even a few days could be costly, a congresswoman from Washington state warned in a House speech last week.

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5 crazy shutdown side effects – Georgia and Keith Ormand stop to take a picture near the entrance to Mount Rushmore National Memorial in Keystone, South Dakota, on October 1. Traffic cones were put up for a short time at a pull-off where people could view the monument. Some said it was to deter tourists from stopping.

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5 crazy shutdown side effects – Austrian tourist Ryszard Skrzypek snaps a photo of his wife, Walendowska Malgorzata, close to the entrance to Grand Canyon National Park near Tusayan, Arizona, on Friday, October 4. Park officials have written citations for people trying to sneak into the park.

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5 crazy shutdown side effects – Tourists watch the Old Faithful geyser in the Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming in June 2011. One tourist told a Massachusetts newspaper that National Park Service guards treated members of her tour group brusquely and told them not to "recreate" while taking pictures of bison.

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5 crazy shutdown side effects – Park maintenance worker Donna Curry tapes up a sign on October 1 notifying visitors the picnic facility in Lake Mead National Recreation Area near Boulder City, Nevada, is closed. A Nevada couple told CNN affiliate KTNV-TV they were kicked out of their cabin, which is on federal land.

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Story highlights

Some websites down, others up; Antarctic research program iced

Rangers are ticketing people who try to sneak into the Grand Canyon

Crabbers can't fish without federal permits

Homeowners on federal land have been kicked out

You know about the obvious impacts of the government shutdown: federal workers idled, offices closed, funding disrupted for all sorts of activities.

But some of the impacts are less obvious, more outrageous, or a little bit of both.

Here's a sampling of some of the spinoff effects of the shutdown showdown in Washington:

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In the digital equivalent of throwing a sheet over unused furniture, many federal agencies have replaced their websites and all the information on them with static pages announcing the government shutdown.

Whether a website will be up or not, however, is something of a guessing game.

The National Parks Service site is down. It sends visitors to the Department of Interior's website, which is up but not being updated.

The Department of Justice website is up, but the website for its subordinate agency, the Bureau of Justice Statistics, greets visitors with a stark white page reading, "Due to the lapse in federal funding, this Office of Justice Programs (OJP) website is unavailable."

That you can still reach the websites mean the computers that serve the data are still up and running, and the government is either paying a private company to operate them or they're using taxpayer-funded power to continue running.

But it doesn't matter if running the sites with big "closed" sign draped across the front costs the same or even more than letting them run, the White House said in a September 17 memo to federal employees.

"The determination of which services continue during an appropriations lapse is not affected by whether the costs of shutdown exceed the costs of maintaining services," according to the memo.

Icing Antarctic research

While NASA has the okay to keep supporting U.S. astronauts at the International Space Station, the same apparently isn't true of scientists at what may be the United States' next most desolate outpost: Antarctica.

The National Science Foundation said Wednesday that it would run out of money to keep the U.S. Antarctic Program going by October 14.

So it's putting the program into "caretaker status," leaving research stations and other facilities staffed with only the bare number of people necessary to "ensure human safety and preserve government property," the agency said.

That means many of the scientists who would be heading to the program's Antarctic research stations to work over the Southern Hemisphere's summer, which begins in December and runs February, are in limbo.

The agency says it will try to restart the research program once funding resumes, but says that it could be tough once seasonal workers are let go and the seasonal window to do some of the work has passed.

Emptiest catch

The shutdown also could make its way to your seafood dinner plate.

Without federal employees to set rules and quotas for the fishing season, crab fleets in Alaska are in limbo -- unsure whether they'll be able to head out in pursuit of lucrative crab that bring in millions of dollars each season.

A delay of even a few days could be costly, Rep. Suzan DelBene, D-Washington, said in a House speech last week. Her district includes the home port for some of the fleets that fish for Bering Sea crab.

"A delay could mean they'll miss out exporting to the all-important Asian holiday market when demand is at its highest and most lucrative," she said.

That could cost the industry millions, dealing it what she called a "crippling blow."

One fishing captain told CNN affiliate KIRO that the delay threatens what they call the "Super Bowl of crab fishing."

"We think of a lot of other things besides the government affecting our fishing -- weather, boats, crew," said Capt. Moore Dye of the fishing vessel Western Mariner. "This has really caught us off guard."

No, the Obama administration has not deployed helicopters to hover in front of Mount Rushmore National Monument with a giant, view-obscuring sheet, as the rumor-busting site snopes.com debunked last week.

But federal officials did -- for a time at least -- put traffic cones up at a pull-off where people stop to view the carving from a distance. Depending on whom you ask, the cones were either to block motorists from pulling off or to guide them into viewing areas.

"They won't even let you pull off on the side of the road," the Argus Leader newspaper in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, quoted state Tourism Department Secretary Jim Hagen as saying. "I just don't know what they're trying to accomplish."

The newspaper said park officials told the state the cones were meant only to channel motorists into viewing sites. They went up October 1, the day the shutdown began.

Federal officials removed the cones for at least a while after a snowstorm hit and crews needed to plow the roads, the newspaper reported.

"Once the snow's off the ground, we're going to be keeping an eye on how the cones go up," the newspaper quoted the governor's chief of staff, Dusty Johnson, as saying.

The area around the Grand Canyon is a ghost town. It's no different inside, and park rangers are working to keep it that way, according to The Republic newspaper in Arizona.

Park officials have written about two dozen citations for people trying to sneak into the park. Some have been caught at the canyon's South Rim, others on trails or attempting hikes, the newspaper reported.

According to the Eagle-Tribune newspaper of North Andover, Massachusetts, tourist Pat Vaillancourt said National Park Service Guards held her tour group under armed guard in a Yellowstone National Park hotel and brusquely told tourists who had filed off their bus to take pictures of bison that they weren't to "recreate."

The tour guide argued to rangers that the tourists -- some of them from overseas -- weren't "recreating," just taking pictures.

"She responded and said, 'Sir, you are recreating,' and her tone became very aggressive," the newspaper quoted Vaillancourt as saying.

Yellowstone spokesman Al Nash, who despite being furloughed was asked by park officials to respond to some media inquiries when available, said hotel guests were never held under armed guard.

He acknowledged that tourists were frustrated by limitations imposed by the shutdown -- he said parks officials were, as well.

Retirees Joyce and Ralph Spencer own a cabin on federal land, and were told last week they had 24 hours to clear out and stay out until the government reopens.

Park officials gave KTNV a statement saying overnight stays are not allowed in the park until funding is restored, but said owners can visit their properties to retrieve belongings.

While the decision has angered some commenters on KTNV's story -- some of whom suggested the decision to kick out property owners was made out of spite and encouraged the couple to sue -- Joyce Spencer said they're taking the situation in stride.

While they'd like to be allowed back in their home, the worst impact has been that she had to buy her husband new clothes they forgot while packing up to leave their cabin.

"We're not hurt in any way except it might cost me if I have to go buy more pants," she told KTNV.

Congressional approval ratings hovered at historic lows. Republican and Democrats hurled insults at each other and among themselves. The political circus in Washington even made its way to "Saturday Night Live: -- in a sketch featuring Miley Cyrus, at that.